The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is thе third time that the City of Wichita’s ongoing dispute over Cable TV (CATV) has appeared before this *538 court. The current action is brought under the declaratory judgment statute (K. S. A. 60-1701) to determine the validity o£ ordinance 32-325 amending a prior ordinance (30-413) and granting a franchise to AirCapital Cablevision, Inc. to operate a cable television system in Wichita. The trial court sustained a motion to dismiss the lawsuit and the plaintiff, KAKE-TV and Radio, Inc., has appealed.
In the course of this opinion we shall refer to the appellant as KAKE or plaintiff, to the appellees collectively as defendants, to the City of Wichita and its officers as Wichita or City, and to Air-Capital Cablevision, Inc., as AirCapital.
It may prove helpful at this point to sketch briefly what transpired before. Wichita’s cable TV experiences originated in the рassage of ordinance 28-882 which purported to fix and define the terms, conditions and procedures under which a CATV system could be operated in that city. On June 13, 1970, this court declared ordinance 28-882 void in
Community Antenna TV of
Wichita,
Inc. v. City of
Wichita,
While the appeal in that case was pending in this court, the city commission аdopted ordinance 30-413, granting a franchise to Air-Capital, which was the successful applicant among the four who bid for the franchise. AirCapital accepted the franchise in writing and, so we are told, filed with the city clerk a surety bond and liability insurance policy as required by the city, and there the matter rested for the time being.
After our opinion went down in the Community Antenna TV appeal the district court enjoined the enforcement of ordinance 28-882. The city thereafter repealed that ordinance but did not repeal ordinance 30-413. Instead the city placed on first and second readings an ordinance, referred to as “unnumbered”, purporting to amend 30-413 and containing many, if not most, of the provisions contained in ordinance 28-882. Community Antenna TV thereupon initiated contempt proceedings against thе city commissioners, which the court eventually dismissed. During those proceedings, however, the trial court entered an amended order declaring that parts of the proposed unnumbered new ordinance went beyond the city’s power to enact and enjoining the city from enacting those sections. On the city’s appeal from that order, this court did a bit of backtracking, after taking a look both at new lеgislation enacted
*539
by the Kansas Legislature, and at new rules promulgated by the Federal Communications Commission. Upon examining the recent legislation and rules we receded from the position taken in the first Community Antenna TV appeal and acknowledged that the furnishing of cable television service was a private business affected with a sufficient public interest to require reasonable municipal rеgulation to prevent harmful consequences to the public interest.
(Community Antenna TV of Wichita v. City of Wichita,
For the second time the Wichita case was returned to its place of origin, where the city commission promptly introduced and passed ordinance 32-325 around which the present controversy swirls. The cast has changed a bit, with KAKE taking the plaintiff’s role, and with new faces on the city commission. But the burden of the plaintiff’s plaint has a familiar sound: The city ordinance, now 32-325, is void and its enforcement should be enjoined.
The petition filed by KAKE contains much of what we have set out as background; challenges the validity of the ordinance on several grounds; and аlleges that AirCapital’s operations under the ordinance would directly compete with plaintiff’s business and cause it irreparable injury. The defendants filed a motion to dismiss and for summary judgment and the district court sustained the motion to dismiss. In so doing, the court found that ordinance 32-325, amending 30-413 which granted the franchise to AirCapital, was valid on its face; that the court was without authority to substitute its opinion for that of the Board of Commissioners of the City of Wichita or of the Federal Communications Commission; that plaintiff did not have such a peculiar interest in the subject matter of the htigation as to maintain this action; and that defendant’s motion, so far as it sought summary judgment, was moot.
In our view, the all-important issue to be determined in this appeal is whether the plaintiff has sufficient status, or standing, to maintain the present lawsuit.
Before an action may be maintained under the declaratory judgment statute (K. S. A. 60-1701), an actual controversy must exist between the proper parties.
(Fairfax Drainage District v. City of
*540
Kansas
City,
“We also think it important to emphasize that the declaratory relief sought is not appropriate in this case since there is no justiciable controversy between adverse parties. It is of course hom-book law that there must be at least two parties who can assert rights which have developed or will arise against each other before an actual controversy can exist which is justiciable under our declaratory judgment act. (Citing cases.) In this case the defendant secretary of state has no actual interest adverse to the plaintiff in the construction or the validity of House Bill 1715. Any interest she might have is purely academic. In a declaratory judgment action there should be suitable adverse parties so that all issues pertaining to the construction or validity of a statute may properly be raised to avoid multiplicity of litigation.” (p. 259.)
KAKE is a radio and television broadcaster operating in Wichita and other areas of this state. Its principal broadcasting studio and facilities are berthed in Wichita. The company beams its programs over the public airways as opposed to the CATV system of capturing from the public airways the broadcasts of such companies as KAKE and others in that category. As we have said before, KAKE alleges that AirCapital’s CATV operation will compete with and damage its business. Hence KAKE insists it has such a peculiar and particular interest in the subject matter of the litigation, different from that of citizens generally, as would permit it to maintаin this action. The defendants challenge that position and thus the battle is joined.
All parties appear to be in agreement as to the general rule that the right to question the validity of a franchise is in the granting authority and that a franchise is not subject to collateral attack by a private party absent a showing that he has a special interest or suffers some peculiar injury distinct from that of citizens gеnerally. (36 Am. Jur. 2d Franchises, § 20, p. 741; § 67, p. 797.) The rule which denies a third party the right to question the validity of a franchise ordinance is stated in 6 McQuillin, Mun Corp (3rd Ed.) § 20.20, p. 53:
“A taxpayer or citizen or any third party ordinarily cannot attack the *541 validity of an ordinance granting or relating to a franchise or privilege, at least where the ordinance has been accepted, acted upon, and become a contract.
In vоlume 12, § 34.84 of the same work at page 202 we find the rule further discussed:
“The validity of a franchise granted by a municipal corporation is not subject to collateral attack. Views have been expressed that, ordinarily, only parties having an interest in the subject matter of the franchise are entitled to complain of its grant, and, indeed, that one not a party to the franchise cannot question its validity. Ordinarily, the franchise cannot be attacked by one who does not claim an exclusive or concurrent right. Thus, if a grant is claimed to be invalid because exclusive, the only one who can raise the question is one claiming the right to do something contrary to such exclusive feature. Usually a taxpayer or an abutting owner cannot attack the validity of a franchise, at least unless he sustains some special injury because of it, or unless the right to test the validity of the franchise is granted to private persons by statute. . . .”
Kansas cases are in general accord. In the early case of
Mining and Gas Co. v. Gas and Mining Co.,
The rationale underlying the gas company case was followed and applied in
Telephone Co. v. Telephone Association,
The trial court refused the injunctiоn. This court, in upholding the lower court’s judgment on appeal, said:
“Ordinarily the usurpation of a corporate privilege or public franchise can only be challenged by an action in the name of the state by its proper officer.
“In Kansas that proper officer would be the county attorney. (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2226; The State, ex rel. County Attorney, v. Eble,77 Kan. 179 ,93 Pac. 803 .) The attorney-general is likewise frequently called upon to challenge the exercise of some unauthorized corporate power. (Citing cases.)” (p. 162.)
The court then went on to say:
"A private plaintiff who is likely to be injured in some special manner or whose situation is peculiarly affected by the exercise of a usurped power could maintain the action, but no such case is presented here.
“. . . [I]t does not appear that a mere rival in business has such an interest as will permit it to maintain an action of this character. . . .” (pp. 163, 165.)
KAKE cites a number of Kansas cases in which it was held permissible for a private individual or a corporation to question the validity of an ordinance. In most of those cases the ordinance involved was not one which granted a franchise but was one which was regulatory in character and directly affected the plaintiff bringing the action. We shall not attempt a complete analysis of all the cases cited by KAKE. Typical of most, however, are
Peoples Taxicab Co. v. City of Wichita,
Two other cases cited by KAKE deserve brief mention. In
Wichita Transportation Co. v. Peoples Taxicab Co.,
At first glance it might appear that
Gas Service Co. v. Consolidated Gas Utilities Corp.,
So far as we can tell from the record the only claim made by KAKE to a special or particular interest in the subject matter of ordinance 32-325 which would distinguish its position from that of members of the general public is that of competition which it asserts would cause injury to its business and damage to its economic health. On the basis of our past decisions we regard this attempted distinction as insufficient to confer special status upon KAKE to challenge the subject ordinance. In a free society, business and industry operate on a competitive basis and great economic development has been attained in this country from a system which values fair and honest competition. The threat, or perhaps we might better say the challenge, of competition faces most American businesses and we would presume it is always close to those who make use of our busy airways.
The question of standing to maintain an action of this character under circumstances very similar to those of the instant case was recently before the New Mexico Supreme Court in
Hubbard
Broadcasting,
Inc. v. City of
Albuquerque, 82 N. M. 164,
In supplying a negative answer to the question “Does Hubbard have standing to maintain the action?” the New Mexico court quoted the following passage from
Ruidoso State Bank v. Brumlow,
81 N. M. 379,
“‘One whose only injury will result from lawful competition suffers no legal wrong. B * *
“ ‘The right to appellate review of a judgment or order exists only in one who is aggrieved or prejudiced thereby. * * Appeals are ordinarily not allowed for the purpose of settling abstract questions, however interesting or important to the public generally, but only to correct error injuriously affecting appellant. * * °
“ ‘ * # * The true test is whether appellant’s legal rights have been invaded, not merely whether he hаs suffered [or may suffer in the future] any actual pecuniary loss or been deprived of any actual pecuniary benefit. * * (p. 165.)
Later in the Hubbard opinion the court said:
“One injured by competition authorized by a state instrumentality has no standing to maintain a suit for declaratory relief against such state instrumentality. Nantucket Boat Inc. v. Woods Hole,345 Mass. 551 ,188 N. E. 2d 476 (1963); 22 Am. Jur. 2d Declaratory Judgments, § 32 at 883.
“. . . [T]he general rule is that economic injury from lawful competition cannot, in and of itself, confer standing to quеstion the legality of any aspect of the competitor’s operations. . . .” (p. 166.)
In its reply brief, plaintiff endeavors to distinguish the Hubbard case by stating that it did not involve the question of cross-ownership while it has been established here that one of KAKE’s competitors, Kansas State Network Inc., owns a sizeable chunk of AirCapital stock. We have no way of knowing whether or not cross-ownership was involved in the Hubbard case and cannot assume that it was not. We dоubt that the point is too material in any event in view of federal rules relating to cross-ownership. (37 Fed. Reg. p. 3290.)
*545
An interesting situation, somewhat analogous to that with which we deal, was presented to the Utah Supreme Court in
Intermountain Electronics, Inc. v. Tintic School Dist.,
Action was commenced by Intermountain Electrоnics, Inc., to restrain the installation of the translator station, it being alleged that plaintiff had made a substantial investment in installing its CATV system; that it had an exclusive franchise in Eureka and numerous contracts with local subscribers; and that valuable property rights would be destroyed and irreparable injury would ensue if the plan of the defendants was carried out. The Utah court was not impressed. It said:
“The fundamental question is whether the plaintiff asserts a valid basis for prohibiting the defendants from proceeding with the proposed project. To justify doing so, it is not sufficient that the plaintiff claim irreparable injury to its property, but there must be some actual or threatened violation of its rights by a wrongful act of the defendants. . . .
“The electro-magnetic waves existing in the space above the earth which carry these TV signals are of such а nature that they obviously cannot be reduced to physical possession like real or personal property, or be put to an exclusive beneficial use like water. It would therefore be quite unrealistic to consider that property rights could vest as in those instances. The right to use this signal-carrying capacity cannot properly be regarded as so possessed, nor maintained, by any one person to the exclusion of others, unless it is affirmatively so prescribed or regulated by law.
“In making the installation in the first place, the plaintiff must be deemed to have known that it could not arrogate to itself control of the atmosphere and prevent others who might desire to do so from also making use of it. . . (p. 88.)
There is other respectable authority to the effect that there are no special property rights in the national airways and that the activities of those concerns which furnish cable television services do not in and of themselves constitute unfair competition.
(Cable
*546
Vision, Inc. v. KUTV, Inc.,
We are constrained to hold that there exists no justiciable controversy between the plaintiff and defendants sufficient to give the plaintiff standing to maintain the present action.
Our conclusions as to plaintiff’s standing will dispоse of this lawsuit even though the plaintiff has gone to considerable length in arguing against the validity of the franchise ordinance. Questions which go to the validity of ordinance 32-325 become moot once it is determined that KAKE lacked capacity or status to sue. However, it may not be inappropriate to note in closing that it appears, from statements made on oral argument that most, if not all of KAKE’s complaints directed against the ordinance, have been repeated in objections which have been filed to. AirCapital’s application for a certificate of compliance (37 Fed. Reg. p. 3280) which is now pending before the Federal Communications Commission. We understand no hearing has yet been held on AirCapital’s application and we are satisfied that KAKE’s complaints will be well and fully aired at the hearing and will be given due attention.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
